How to write a thesis statement
Religion 274 Roger Graves
Director, Writing Across the Curriculum
Roger Graves
http://www.ualberta.ca/~graves1/index.html
Writing Across the Curriculum
http://www.humanities.ualberta.ca/WAC/
Centre for Writers
http://www.c4w.arts.ualberta.ca/
GRAM WOW!
Note the verbs: Critical analysis
Examine Analyze Critically analyze Historically analyze Assess Interpret Debate Consider Illustrate Evaluate Identify
What do these terms mean to you?
Invention: Generate ideas
Topics:
Annotated bibliography
One paragraph (100-200 words) summarizing your proposed topic – what you are going to do, and how. This paragraph will include an underlined, working thesis statement. By working, I mean that you may end up changing your thesis statement as you work on your essay. This is fine.
An annotated bibliography
1. Summaries of 3+ secondary sources; Summarize each reference in two to three sentences and give qualifications of the author.
1. 1+ primary source: summarize the reference; identify the author, their position/title/relationship to the topic, and the year the source was written.
3. Analytical/critical annotations
An objective evaluation of a work's contents, quality, and limitations. Length is typically between 100-200 words.
Gives full bibliographic information for the work.
Gives the authority and the point of view of the author.
Evaluates the contents, scope, and quality.
Points out the merits and deficiencies.
From h1p://guides.library.ualberta.ca/annota;ons
Annotations
Summarizes the article (2-3 sentences; 45-60 words)
Evaluates:
give qualifications of the author;
identify the author, their position/title/relationship to the topic, and the year the source was written
The essay
Write an interesting and well-argued paper, based on scholarly sources.
Use the work in the annotated bibliography as your sources
The audience
This time you are writing for a scholar of religion knowledgeable in the area of alternative spiritualities, trained as an historian. To repeat, this means I am looking for a cogent argument, well supported by appropriate sources.
Instructor knows lots about alternative spiritualities
Values historical research and evidence: what does that mean? What evidence counts in history? (rubric says “Provides evidence to support arguments: Ideas clearly informed by readings and properly cited” and “Uses direct quotations sparingly and effectively”)
Methods that work to improve writing quality 1. Direct instruction (.80 effect size)
2. Peer assistance (.75)
3. Setting product goals (.70)
4. Word processing software (.55)
5. Sentence combining (.50)
6. Process approach (.32; .80 done well)
7. Prewriting (.32)
8. Inquiry (.32)
9. Models (.25)
Invention: Levack
Define witchcraft in medieval/early modern Europe based on information from one of the following chapters from Levack
Evaluate this perspective as a contemporary: is it credible?
Power of the devil—evil not good things
Exploitation of secret powers in nature
Unnatural—anything; flying to a group gathering
Turning people into frogs and newts
Blame for bad crops
Conjuring people
Forcing people against their will
What topic will you study?"
Identify a topic of inquiry
Translate that topic into a thesis by stating what your attitude is to that topic
In this essay I will analyze how leisure and vice combined to form what have been called “sinful pleasures” in the boom-town gold rush economy of the Klondike. The absence of traditional social hierarchies in this time and place, combined with the fuel of easy money and masculinity, accounted for this new conception of leisure.
From the Winter class
Magic as a transformation of the mind
Christianization of pagan rituals
History of religious practices isn’t progressive from one religious practice to another—it is not a linear progression.
Many of the traditional practices of the Christian holidays—the date, the tree, the star-- arose from pagan traditions. Co-opted and incorporated
Turn a topics into a thesis
Witchcraft was defined as someone using otherworldly powers to bring down other people, including using spells, alchemy, divination, and astrology. To the average person living in the time of the black plague, this would have seemed reasonable.
Your argument
Informal Argument and Academic Writing
Ex. [this study] will be a unique scholarly contribution as very few studies genuinely combine oral history and the documentary record.
Claim Link (because) Reason
Challenges
(How, So what, Why?)
Evidence
(Data, Statistics, Expert opinion, Visuals, Other studies, etc. [What counts is often discipline‐speciCic])
Claims and Assumptions
• Claim + stated reason rest upon an unstated reason
• Both the stated and unstated reasons rely on shared assumptions of value between the writer and the reader
• Evidence demonstrates the validity of the stated or unstated reasons
• When values are shared, less evidence is needed to convince the reader
A claim in 3 parts
By engaging in historical/archival research, by reviewing the vast amount of public information now available on [this topic], and by conducting interviews with policy makers, researchers, activists and industry representatives, my research will develop a systematic assessment of [topic] and the conditions in which is has become finalized.
Getting organized
Thesis= main claim, argument The absence of traditional social hierarchies in this time and place, combined with the fuel of easy money and masculinity, accounted for this new conception of leisure
Body: subsidiary claims 1. Free enterprise capitalism in the Klondike contributed to a dominant
ideological stance that valued the free choice of the individual to pursue whatever leisure activities they wanted—including gambling, drinking to excess, and womanizing—with few, if any, restraints.
2. Leisure in the Klondike boomtown created and enforced a particular kind of masculinity in contrast to the “rational recreation” of more established cities and towns in the Northwest.
Body—Part 1
Free enterprise capitalism in the Klondike contributed to a dominant ideological stance that valued the free choice of the individual to pursue whatever leisure activities they wanted—including gambling, drinking to excess, and womanizing—with few, if any, restraints.
Implied in this claim is the structure (order) of the next part of the essay:
1. A section or paragraph on gambling 2. A section or paragraph on drinking to excess 3. A section or paragraph on womanizing/sexual
debauchery